Responding to the Rise of the Far Right
Is Religion the Problem, the Victim, or a Resource? Yes…
Religious Violence in Burma
Holocaust Memorial Day 2014
Five Lessons about Our Challenge as Peacemakers
Malala’s Muslim Faith: A Voice of Islam for the Next Generation
Hate Comes to Manchester, Tennessee
A Salute to America
On Atheists and Theists Together at the Interfaith Table
As an interfaith activist, I’ve worked to bring an end to religious division. In recent years, this has increasingly meant speaking out against the rise in anti-Muslim rhetoric and violence sweeping America.
The Beloved Community in the Face of Violence
Looking Back – Interfaith 2012
Jihad on the D Train
Interfaith Misunderstanding in America
When Interfaith Activists Face Violence
Where the Anti-Muslim Path Leads
“If I were Muslim, I’d kill myself.”
No, that’s not what was said. It was: “If I looked like him, I’d kill myself.”
The speaker was my favorite uncle, commenting on an overweight man, across a hotel pool. Considering how much self-talk I had engaged in to convince myself to be seen in a swimsuit, visiting my California relatives, I absorbed this pronouncement in shame and silence, trying desperately to hold onto shreds of self-worth.